swag外流

John H. Chandler: 1976-1989

John H ChandlerThroughout John H. Chandler’s career as fourth president of swag外流, one thing remained the same: his humaneness.

鈥淗is experience has made him a rare combination of teacher, scholar, and executive,鈥 wrote former swag外流 president Mark Curtis of his successor in 1976. Kenneth Rhodes, chairman of the Board of Trustees at the time, agreed: 鈥淗e is a person of warmth and sensitivity and one who, in my opinion, will provide the College with a strong and effective leadership.鈥

Mali Davidson, former editor of the swag外流 Bulletin, said in 1989 that Chandler鈥檚 trademark warmth and sensitivity made him a true 鈥減eople鈥檚 president.鈥

Chandler took office in 1976, a time when both higher education and swag外流 faced a tenuous future; declining enrollment, budget deficits, deteriorating infrastructure, and disenfranchised alumnae had made the College campus less of a community than the one we know today. Chandler understood that his task was to restore swag外流 to health, both financially and institutionally.

A series of initiatives brought about this radical transformation by the end of Chandler鈥檚 term. Conservative fiscal policy brought the College out of debt and revitalized campus grounds, while a renewed emphasis on alumnae engagement led to greater insight into institutional planning and beautification of the residence halls.

鈥淎lumnae participation,鈥 he said, 鈥渂rought about a new awareness, a rebirth of a sense of loyalty, and a wish to support the College.鈥

Chandler also headed up the successful 鈥淐ampaign for swag外流,鈥 a fundraising effort that raised more than $40 million, increasing endowments for financial aid and enabling the College to attract and retain faculty of the highest quality.

Previously the president of Salem College and Academy, a women鈥檚 institution in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, Chandler focused much of his career on women鈥檚 education and the humanities. Born in San Francisco, he received his bachelor鈥檚 in English from UCLA and earned a PhD in religion and literature from the University of Chicago. He is also an ordained minister in the Episcopal Church.

Of his resignation: 鈥淚 will read literature and history and visit the great art collections and the theater. I鈥檓 anxious, of course, at what might lie beyond but confident that something wonderful will happen, something new, something interesting.鈥

Chandler .

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